do without
do without — 片語動詞
1. to manage to live, work, or continue in a situation where you do not have a part
沒有…也行
在缺乏某物時仍能應付
to manage to live, work, or continue in a situation where you do not have a particular thing that you normally need or want — for example, not buying something because you cannot afford it, finishing a task even though a tool is missing, or accepting the absence of a person who usually helps.
Aisha's car broke down, so she had to do without it for two weeks.
Aisha 的車壞了,所以她兩個星期沒有車也能撐過去。
have to + do without + pronoun (it)
When Julio lost his job, the family learned to do without luxuries like eating out.
Julio 失業之後,全家人學會了沒有外食等奢侈品也能過日子。
do without + noun phrase (luxuries)
The old clinic cannot do without basic supplies such as gloves and bandages.
那間老舊的診所不能沒有手套和繃帶這類基本物資。
If you forget the eggs, we will just have to do without.
如果你忘了帶雞蛋,我們只好不用了。
Mei-Lin could do without the loud music from her neighbour's flat every night.
Mei-Lin 真希望鄰居每天晚上不要放那麼吵的音樂。
- go without
more common in British English; interchangeable in most contexts but emphasises the absence as an active choice or necessity
- manage without
slightly more formal than 'do without'; stresses the coping aspect
- forgo
more formal and deliberate; implies a voluntary choice to give something up, not merely an enforced absence
文法句型
do without + noun phrase
do without + pronoun (it, them)
do without (intransitive — object implied by context)
can't/couldn't do without + noun phrase (strong necessity)
用法筆記
Frequently used with modal verbs. When transitive, the object is a thing or a situation the speaker finds difficult to tolerate (affirmative) or impossible to miss (negative). The intransitive use relies on context to make clear what is being done without.
常見錯誤
❌ 'She did without it for the weekend and managed fine.' (correct but missing modal) — 'did without' is grammatically acceptable in past-tense narratives, but in everyday speech a modal (had to, could) is far more common.